The festival air shimmered with golden lanternlight.
Paper streamers swirled between rooftops, and the scent of honey-dipped apples, roasted corn, and cinnamon bread hung thick in the breeze. Townsfolk bustled through cobbled streets dressed in bright linens and flower crowns, laughing and weaving between stalls. Children darted about with glowing sticks, and the air pulsed with drums and laughter.
Rhea clung to Elias's sleeve like she was being dragged to her execution.
"I don't want to go," she muttered.
"You said you wanted to see the lights," Elias replied, carefully balancing a pair of candied plums in one hand and a hot mug of cider in the other. "This is the festival. There are lights. Mission accomplished."
"I meant from the window."
"You meant pouting on the windowsill with demon-sulking aura while the rest of us enjoy the festival?"
Rhea huffed and glared up at him. Her flower crown—daisies and thorny ivy—tilted lopsided over one ear.
"I don't sulk. I contemplate."
"Right," Elias said, deadpan. "And that kid you scared off earlier just happened to trip over your aura of deep contemplation?"
"He was throwing rocks at a duck."
"That doesn't mean you had to summon a shadow hand from the cobblestones."
"He was throwing rocks, Elias. At a duck."
Okay, fair. Elias sighed, shoving the cup of cider into her hands. She took it, still scowling, then hesitated as the warmth spread through her fingers. Her glare softened slightly.
The crowd flowed around them in cheerful tides. Laughter bubbled from a nearby stage where bards performed slapstick plays involving magical mishaps, flying wigs, and a chicken that may or may not have been enchanted. No one seemed to notice the girl in dark clothes with faint ember-gold eyes.
Rhea sipped her cider.
"…It's sweet."
"It's supposed to be."
"…I don't hate it."
Elias grinned. "High praise."
"I'm still not dancing."
"I never asked you to."
"You were thinking it really loudly."
He couldn't deny that. He had hoped. The town's Harvest Moon Festival wasn't just about food and fireworks—it was one of the rare times the villagers dropped their suspicions and came together. Lately, even the gossip about "Elias's cursed girl" had cooled, especially since Rhea saved a classmate during the mock raid.
Still… Rhea wasn't just any girl. And she knew it.
She walked with one foot in another world. Magic rippled off her when she sneezed. The air itself seemed to shift when she was deep in thought. People wanted to forgive her—because she was small, cute, and earnest—but they still watched her.
Even now, a few eyes lingered too long. Some out of curiosity. A few with worry.
Rhea noticed.
She always did.
So she held her cup like a tiny defensive wall and stayed close to Elias, pretending she wasn't reading everyone's body language with the sharpness of a former queen.
"I don't belong here," she murmured.
Elias crouched beside her on the edge of the fountain.
"Neither do I."
She blinked at him.
He gestured at the crowd. "These people grew up together. They've danced under this moon since they were kids. I dropped in like a sword through a window—literally—after the war. They accepted me, but I'm still… not quite them."
"You hide it better."
He shrugged. "That's what adults do. We fake it."
"…That's stupid."
"Yeah," Elias said with a laugh. "It is."
Rhea watched the dancers at the square's center: kids holding hands, twirling clumsily; parents stomping in time with the drums; couples gliding in slower, smoother steps. A young woman lifted her baby and spun, both laughing.
The music shifted to a slower rhythm. Fireflies drifted through the lanternlight. The laughter dimmed as more dancers paired off.
Elias noticed the change too.
He cleared his throat. "We can go. If you want."
Rhea hesitated. Her fingers gripped the cup tighter.
"…Will they stare?"
"They always stare."
She lowered the cup. "I'll hex their shoes off."
"Tempting," Elias said, standing. "But how about we charm them instead?"
She eyed him suspiciously. "Are you asking me to charm mortals with my dance?"
"Exactly that," Elias said, bowing exaggeratedly and offering his hand. "One dance. No hexes. No fire. No ominous proclamations of doom."
Rhea stared at his outstretched hand. Her eyes flicked to the dancers, then to the people watching, then back to Elias.
"…I don't know how."
"I'll teach you."
She frowned. "You've never danced either."
"I was taught once." He cleared his throat. "For a mission. I had to blend in at a masquerade party hosted by a vampire noble."
She squinted. "You're making that up."
"Am not."
"…Was the vampire hot?"
"She had three arms and breathed smoke."
"That's not a no."
He laughed. "Come on. Just follow my lead."
Rhea looked at his hand again.
Then, slowly—very slowly—she placed her tiny fingers in his.
He guided her gently to the edge of the circle.
People glanced over.
Someone whispered.
Rhea flinched.
But Elias didn't let go.
"Left foot," he murmured, taking a small step.
She mirrored him, uncertain.
"Right foot. Easy."
They moved awkwardly. Clunky. Like two puzzle pieces from different boxes.
But the music was forgiving, and the circle widened slightly to make space for them. Some of the older dancers smiled in encouragement. A child clapped when Rhea twirled (accidentally) into Elias's shin.
"Ow," Elias said.
"That was sabotage," she deadpanned.
"I demand compensation."
"Denied."
They shuffled, tripped, and eventually found something like rhythm. Rhea's scowl softened into confusion… then into concentration. Her feet followed Elias's, one-two-one-two, until they weren't so much dancing as gliding.
The music carried them.
The world blurred around the edges.
The fireflies danced with them.
Elias spun her—carefully—and caught her again. Her laugh surprised even her.
Then the crowd clapped.
Rhea blinked, realizing they were still being watched—but this time the looks weren't afraid. Or judging. Or cold.
They were smiling.
"They're… clapping?"
"You didn't hex anyone."
"I still could."
"But you didn't."
She bit her lip.
"…Did I mess up?"
"Only three times."
"I stepped on your foot."
"Twice."
"I don't know how to be normal, Elias."
He knelt beside her again.
"You're not supposed to be. You're supposed to be you."
She looked down.
"…People are starting to forget."
"Forget what?"
"That I was her. The Queen."
He looked at her for a long moment.
Then said softly, "Good."
Rhea's eyes widened.
"You're not her anymore. You're you."
"I still remember."
"Then maybe this life is your second chance."
She blinked rapidly. Her lip wobbled slightly.
Then she reached up and flicked his nose.
"Ow!"
"Too sappy," she said. "You made it weird."
He snorted. "Fine. I take it back. Go hex someone's shoes off."
"Already did."
"Wait—what?!"
Rhea giggled, cupping her mouth. She tugged his hand again. "Come on. I want to dance again."
He stood, groaning exaggeratedly. "My back wasn't made for dancing with former demon royalty."
"Then kneel, peasant."
"Yes, Your Tiny Majesty."
They joined the dancers again—still a little clumsy, still a little awkward. But this time, Rhea wasn't holding back. She twirled (on purpose), laughed (loudly), and glared at a teenager who looked too smug (who tripped moments later—totally unrelated).
At the edge of the crowd, the guild master watched from a bench, puffing on his pipe.
"That girl," he murmured, "is going to break this whole world."
Beside him, the librarian from town squinted over her glasses. "And she's going to fix it too."
To be continued…